Fun take of a Christmas Carol
This was a very fun take on a Christmas carol. I do think that parts of the story were a little overly long which was why I gave this 3.5 stars, rounded it up to 4 stars. But I just thought the whole thing hung together very well and I was very pleased with the ending. But I am going to say out loud, this isn't really a typical romance. I thought it had romantic elements, but this was not set-up as a typical second chance romance...at least not in the way that most romance readers may appreciate.
Full review: I thought this was a very interesting romance read that starts off around the Christmas season, and proceeds through the months as we follow Avery Lawrence and her trying to find herself again.
"The Last Phone Booth in Manhattan" follows former aspiring singer/actress Avery Lawrence. She and her long term boyfriend finally are engaged. He's a very very rich man and Avery can have anything she wants. But when the feds come a knocking, she finds out that her life was never real and her fiancee was just another frauster. When she's arrested (for being an idiot) she is released from jail and runs into a guard who points her to a phone booth to make a call. That number leads her to an address, of her last boyfriend, Gabe. And from there, Avery is on the hunt to figure out what the phone booth is trying to tell her. To choose Gabe or another path that she does not know if she can succeed at.
I will say that at first I wasn't super fond of Avery, but she grew on me as a character. Her realizing that everything her fiancee did was fake got to me. She gave up a lot (willingly) and realized that she needed to self correct. Reading about her auditions and her finally maybe getting a break, was awesome.
For those that complained about the chemistry between her and Gabe. I saw it myself, but I just thought he was a backseat character myself. I thought Avery's friendship with Marisol and her new roommates, her new boss were mostly what this story was about myself.
The flow was a bit sticky at places though. Just because sometimes it started to feel repetitive when Avery would tell someone else the phone booth story. I just got tired of reading about it.
New York really does come alive in this story I thought. And the authors definitely have a love of Broadway that came shining through.
I loved the ending.